2016
DOI: 10.1088/1612-2011/13/11/115101
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Highly stable, efficient Tm-doped fiber laser—a potential scalpel for low invasive surgery

Abstract: We report an all-fiber, diode-pumped, continuous-wave Tm 3+ -doped fiber laser emitting 37.4 W of output power with a slope efficiency as high as 57% with respect to absorbed pump power at 790 nm. The laser operated at ~1.94 µm and the output beam quality factor M 2 was measured to be ~1.2. The output beam was very stable with power fluctuations <1% measured over 1 h. The laser system is to be implemented as a scalpel for low-invasive soft-tissue surgery.

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Cited by 30 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…The output radiation was characterized by a very good beam quality (parameter M 2~1 .2), and therefore it could easily be inserted into the treatment probes with a diameter smaller than 50 µm [17]. The details of the laser can be found in [23].…”
Section: Lasersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The output radiation was characterized by a very good beam quality (parameter M 2~1 .2), and therefore it could easily be inserted into the treatment probes with a diameter smaller than 50 µm [17]. The details of the laser can be found in [23].…”
Section: Lasersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Optical fibers and fiber‐based coherent light sources have become increasingly attractive for a wide range of biomedical applications, such as surgical operations, monitoring and chemical analysis of tissues with minimal disruption of the skin or internal organs of the patient . However, several key issues in the in vivo application of optical fibers remain up to now unsolved.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fiber was spliced together with a standard graded-index multimode fiber pigtail and an optical probe for in vitro pH measurement was prepared by the immobilization of a fluorescent dye on the fiber tip by a sol-gel method to demonstrate applicability and compatibility of the fiber with common fiber optics. Optical fibers and fiber-based coherent light sources have become increasingly attractive for a wide range of biomedical applications, such as surgical operations, monitoring and chemical analysis of tissues with minimal disruption of the skin or internal organs of the patient [1][2][3]. However, several key issues in the in vivo application of optical fibers remain up to now unsolved.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fiber-based laser sources comprising continuous-wave (CW) [1][2], nanosecond [3][4][5], picosecond [6][7][8], femtosecond [9][10][11] fiber lasers and amplifiers as well as supercontinuum sources [12][13][14] offer the efficient generation of laser radiation from compact lowmaintenance devices, which have created a wide range of applications in the industry. Especially medical applications like surgery of soft biological tissues have gained a lot of interest recently [15][16][17]. Lasers used in microsurgery operate at wavelengths corresponding to local peaks at ~2.94 μm and 1.94 μm.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%